We are pleased to present the Curve Power List for 2025. Raquel Willis (she/her) is an award-winning author, activist, and media strategist dedicated to collective liberation, especially for Black ...
Curve editor Merryn Johns reflects on a female photographer whose work possibly altered the course of her life, and discovers that they share a female gaze across hemispheres—and a love for Vegemite.
We asked, and you nominated. Here are the top 50 outstanding individuals who made our inaugural Power List for their incredible work in the public eye, behind the scenes, in our community, or the ...
Real-life besties Leisha Hailey and Kate Moennig sit down with Janelle Beck to discuss their joint memoir So Gay for You, which is a New York Times bestseller—and the phenomenon that was the ...
2025 marks the third year of The Curve Foundation’s re-invigorated annual community Photo Contest! Curve magazine held an annual lesbian lifestyle photography contest for eleven years, and we are so ...
Artist-in-residence Ava Calbreath was inspired to dive into ‘Ask Fairy Butch’ and visually represent some of the highlights of the beloved Curve advice column. The result was a conceptual art project ...
The Canadian folk singer dishes on not being defined by lesbianism and playing house with Bitch. Since she hit the women’s music scene in 1980, Ferron has been sharing her soulful, poetic songs with ...
Written and directed by Felicia Pride, tender is Pride’s directorial debut and first project out of Pride’s Gen-X focused production company, Felix & Annie, which is named after her parents. The short ...
For 34 years, The Dinah has been the world’s premiere event for lesbians and queer women. Featured in numerous films and TV shows, including The L Word, the annual Palm Springs festival has been a ...
Former Curve magazine editors-in-chief Merryn Johns and Diane Anderson-Minshall have a conversation about a pivotal Curve cover story. Lesbian photography is one of the championed causes of Curve. But ...
Steering and shaping content for a lesbian magazine is not for the faint of heart. Still, it can be incredibly fulfilling, especially for those of us who discovered our authentic identities through ...
For five years, I wrestled with a concept of something intangible, unformed. The framework, nebulous and bold, lingered in the back of my mind, growing alongside a rising ache: a frustration with the ...
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